Farrukhabad: Forty-nine infants died in a month in the Farrukhabad district hospital, most of them from “perinatal asphyxia”, a condition in which the child cannot breathe properly, officials have informed. In a virtual replay of the tragedy in Gorakhpur, where 30 children died in two days in a state-run hospital last month, parents of many of the children in Farrukhabad told officials there was a delay in providing oxygen and medicines.

The hospital recorded 49 deaths — 30 in neo-natal ICU and 19 during delivery — between July 20 and August 21, an official spokesperson said in Lucknow. The state government today removed Farrukhabad District Magistrate Ravindra Kumar as well as Chief Medical Officer (CMO) Umakant Pandey and Chief Medical Superintendent (CMS) Akhilesh Agarwal.

The hospital recorded 49 deaths — 30 in neo-natal ICU and 19 during delivery — between July 20 and August 21, an official spokesperson said in Lucknow. The state government today removed Farrukhabad District Magistrate Ravindra Kumar as well as Chief Medical Officer (CMO) Umakant Pandey and Chief Medical Superintendent (CMS) Akhilesh Agarwal.

The state government today removed Farrukhabad District Magistrate Ravindra Kumar as well as Chief Medical Officer (CMO) Umakant Pandey and Chief Medical Superintendent (CMS) Akhilesh Agarwal. An FIR against the CMO and the CMS was registered last night in Farrukhabad, about 180 km from the state capital. “A high-level team will be sent to Farrukhabad to probe the deaths and its technical aspects will also be taken care of. Taking note of the incident, the DM, the CMO and the CMS (“A high-level team will be sent to Farrukhabad to probe the deaths and its technical aspects will also be taken care of. Taking note of the incident, the DM, the CMO and the CMS (womens hospital) have been removed,” the spokesperson said. He said 468 deliveries took place in the womens wing of the hospital during the period. Of these, 19 were stillbirths. City Magistrate Jaynendra Kumar Jain and SDM Ajit Kumar Singh said a probe found that most deaths were due to breathing problems.

They also said in the report that the CMO and the CMS did not cooperate with the investigation. “During the period, 30 children died mostly due to perinatal asphyxia (a condition in which a child does not breathe normally just before, during, or after birth). During

Of these, 19 were stillbirths. City Magistrate Jaynendra Kumar Jain and SDM Ajit Kumar Singh said a probe found that most deaths were due to breathing problems. They also said in the report that the CMO and the CMS did not cooperate with the investigation. “During the period, 30 children died mostly due to perinatal asphyxia (a condition in which a child does not breathe normally just before, during, or after birth). During probe, the parents informed that there was delay in providing oxygen and medicine due to which the children died due to lack of adequate supply of oxygen,” the report stated.

The report did not mention the remaining 19 deaths. Addressing a hurriedly convened press conference today, Principal Secretary (Health) Prashant Trivedi said the deaths had “nothing to do with oxygen supply”. “Stating that the deaths were related to oxygen amounts to making the matter unnecessarily sensational without any basis. the Director General Medical Health will give a detailed report on it,” he added.

The report did not mention the remaining 19 deaths. Addressing a hurriedly convened press conference today, Principal Secretary (Health) Prashant Trivedi said the deaths had “nothing to do with oxygen supply”. “Stating that the deaths were related to oxygen amounts to making the matter unnecessarily sensational without any basis. the Director General Medical Health will give a detailed report on it,” he added.

Principal Secretary (Information) Awanish Awasthi, who was also present, said, “…19 were still born children while 30 others died due to various causes, including perinatal asyphyxia. This may be caused by the umblical cord going around the neck of the child… Our medical team will look at it.”

Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath’s office took prompt notice of the matter after local news channels reported the deaths of 49 children in the hospital and directed the district magistrate to conduct a probe, officials said.

After an FIR was registered against the Chief Medical Officer and the Chief Medical Superintendent of a government-run hospital in Farrukhabad after the death of 49 children in Uttar Pradesh in a month, Indian Medical Association (IMA) president Dr. K.K. Aggarwal on Monday stressed for more attention towards the health of children below the age of five years, citing that the recent reported tragic incidents in Uttar Pradesh are the tip of the iceberg.

Speaking to ANI, the IMA president said, “These incidents are only the tip of an iceberg. There are many more incidents which are occurring every day and so many unknown. The very fact that more than three lakh children below the age of five die only because of Diarrhoea, means that the issue needs to be prevented and no more deaths should take place.”

“The Medical Council of India has made their rules very clear that no doctor can refuse treatment to a patient. Doctors have to be compassionate whether or not they have the required facilities. If he/she has a problem with the infrastructure or feels overloaded with work, the matter needs to take up with the concerned CMO,” he added.

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